Series of Milestones

The timeline can provide useful visual clues to
understanding the progression of historical events, and Clifford Pickover has
employed this mechanism to its fullest. In The
Math Book (2009), The Physics Book
(2011) and The Medical Book (2012;
Sterling Publishing, $29.95 each), Pickover relates milestones in the history
of the books’ subjects. On each two-page spread he ties an important event,
person or discovery to a particular (or, in some cases, approximate) year. The
left-hand page holds the date in large type along with the text; the right
shows a related image. (The image at right, from The Medical Book, is reprinted from Andreas Vesalius’s 1543 book De Humani Corporis Fabrica; it
accompanies an entry on early descriptions of cerebrospinal fluid: in 1736 by
Emanual Swedenborg and in 1764 by Domenico Felice Antonio Cotugno.) This design
may not lend itself to depth, but it is both attractive and captivating. The
books’ starting dates vary: The Physics
Book begins with the Big Bang at 13.7 billion B.P., The Math Book with the “ant odometer” at circa 150 million B.P.

Succinct descriptions make it easy
to flip through and pick up a few facts perfectly suited for cocktail-party
conversation. Colorful, eyecatching illustrations depict everything from a
pseduosphere in The Math Book (which
is a shape that has a constant concavity over its entire surface) to the common
cold in The Medical Book. A subject index
at the end of each book aims to make
it easier to find references when you don’t know which date to look for, but it
can be a bit spotty. For instance, in The
Physics Book, the flyleaf promises the book will answer the question,
“Could we really be living in The Matrix?” But the only subject entry related
to matrices has nothing to do with the movie. It take some digging to figure out
that the referenced section is “1967: Living in a Simulation,” which never
mentions the later movie by name. Nonetheless, in today’s fast-paced world, the
bite-sized entries in these three books make for quick and enlightening
reading.